Balancing Pitta Dosha in the Summer

In order to balance nature’s intense heat in the summer months, it’s time to make some lifestyle changes. Ayurveda calls this the practice of balancing pitta dosha.

Pitta is one of the three vital energies, or doshas that make transformations happen, both within you and in nature. It is responsible for transformation, including digestion, metabolism, and energy movement. It’s also known as the harmonious union of fire and water. This fire and water manifests seasonally as hot, humid summers, which is considered pitta season.

Because you are a reflection of the world around you, increased pitta in nature results in increased heat in your body. It’s very logical: in summer, you feel hotter. Nature is simply exerting its influence on you. Pitta accumulates within you, as the summer months go on. Come fall, pitta has reached its peak. Yoy can see this energy manifest in the trees, as the leaves turn fiery red and orange.

If you don’t care for pitta during the summer, it can become aggravated in the fall. This can result in skin rashes, acid reflux, heartburn, stomach ulcers, irritability, acne, and difficulty staying asleep.

In order to keep this pitta from accumulating and aggravating your internal homeostasis, you should try to keep your body and minds cool during hot summer months.

1. Keep the mind cool.

Pitta imbalances manifest physically in the form of inflammation, rashes, acne, and acidity. They manifest mentally as emotions such as irritability, frustration, and anger. It’s just as important to keep the mind cool, as it is to keep the body cool.

Mind-cooling tips:

Keep a sense of playfulness and lightness through the hot summer months.

Schedule meetings and important interactions outside of the hottest hours of the day, when pitta is at its height.

Make time for rest and relaxation and above all, be playful.

2. Keep the body cool.

Pitta is aggravated by heat. When the sun is at its highest, take cover. This may sound obvious, but it’s not a practice that Americans generally follow. Instead, many people seek the hottest sun in search of a golden tan. This doesn’t do anybody good; especially if we’re pitta by nature.

Do as most eastern cultures do and stay out of the midday sun. Plan for the beach or outdoor time in the morning or afternoon. When the sun is at its highest, try having a nice and restful lunch in the shade.

3. Eat a cooling diet.

You can keep ourselves cool in the summer by eating a diet, rich with cooling foods. This doesn’t mean ice cream and iced tea, but foods that have a cooling, post-digestive effect rather than being cold in temperature. Watermelon and coconut water are perfect examples.

You experience the refreshing effects of coconut water or watermelon juice on a hot summer day. This is due to their cooling quality rather than the temperature at which they’re served. The sweet, astringent, and bitter tastes, all have a cooling effect on the body.

If this all seems confusing, try shopping at the farmer’s market. Each season, nature gives you the foods you need to balance out its influence. In summer, you see loads of vegetables, watermelon, apples, and cucumber—cooling foods that keep pitta in check.

It’s also important not to skip meals. While the digestive fire is naturally weaker in the summer, pitta still gets aggravated when it’s not fed. Make lunch the main meal of the day, and make it leisurely and restful.

4. Plan workouts according to the sun.

Whether it’s yoga, running, or swimming, avoid working out when the sun is in full-force. This is the hottest time of day and also when pitta is as its peak.

Ayurveda explains that working up a sweat at noon on one of those hot summer days, can lead to a pitta imbalance. Instead, work out in the early morning or late evening when the sun is less strong.

5. Bask in the moonlight.

The sun is nature’s heating force, and the moon is its cooling force. Take advantage of this by basking in the moonlight. This practice might sound a little odd, but it works. If the sun has a strong effect on the body, then of course the other planets must as well!

Spend a few minutes outdoors when the moon is visible. This shouldn’t interrupt your sleep cycle—basking in the moonlight at 1 a.m. isn’t going to help balance your pitta—but 10 or 20 minutes of moonlight before bedtime will.

Your intuition is to balance summer’s heat by seeking shade, eating watermelon, and relaxing. Listen to the body’s request and keep cool to balance impending pitta.

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Deepen your yoga practice and inspire your yoga classes with this e-book about the ancient healing system rooted in the concept of the doshas.

Deepen your yoga practice and inspire your yoga classes with this e-book about the ancient healing system rooted in the concept of the doshas.

Julie Bernier helps women to bring their bodies back into balance, whether they’re struggling with hormonal imbalances, period problems, digestive troubles, skin conditions, anxiety, depression, preparing for or recovering from giving birth, or any other dis-ease. This holistic approach to individualized wellness is rooted in ayurveda: a holistic system of healing from ancient India. Julie is a registered Ayurvedic Practitioner and Ayurvedic Yoga Therapist with the National Ayurvedic Medical Association (NAMA) as well as a Certified Massage Therapist. She studied each of these modalities in the US and straight from the source in India. Connect with Julie at trueayurveda.com or on IG at @juliebernier.